World Bank: Pollution costs Middle East, North Africa $141b Annually
By Staff, Agencies
Air pollution costs the Middle East and North Africa $141 billion per year, or around two percent of GDP on average, the World Bank said Monday, urging a green post-COVID recovery for the region.
Environmental pollution will cost some nations in the region – including Egypt, Lebanon, and Yemen – more than three percent of their GDP, the World Bank said in a report.
"Productivity falls if residents cannot work after they or their family members fall ill from air pollution, and health care costs can be a substantial burden on both individuals and governments.”
The average resident will be ill for 60 days in his lifetime due to air pollution, with town dwellers breathing in 10 times the level of pollutants considered safe by the World Health Organization, the report added.
It singled out "low environmental standards" in the transportation and industry sectors, the use of low-quality fuel, and burning waste as the main drivers of air pollution in the region.
One of the most plastic-polluted seas in the world is the Mediterranean, it noted, adding that the average resident dumps more than 13 pounds of waste into its waters each year.
The Mediterranean has "as much plastic flowing into it each year as the volume of fish taken out from the two most commonly caught species.”
Sea pollution also drives coastal erosion, and in countries that rely on tourism for revenue, such as Tunisia, coastal erosion could cost the country up to 2.8% of its GDP.
"Polluted skies and seas are costly to the health, social, and economic wellbeing of millions of people in the Middle East and North Africa region," said Ferid Belhaj, World Bank vice president for the region.
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